Jul 23 2017, 10.22pm
Today, I had to work pretty hard to drag myself out of the house and run the errands that needed running. One of those errands involved going to Target to pick up my Spiro prescription which, for some reason, hadn't been refilled with my Estradiol patches. I had less than a day's worth left, so I couldn't wait any longer.
When I got there, I had the card in hand from the last time I had gotten it filled, so there could be no mistake. I handed it to the pharmacist - a woman around my age. She looked at the card and then at me and said to me, "I'm not sure how to ask this, but what's your name? I know I can't call you '{DEADNAME}' - it would probably be a little awkward."
"My name's 'Cassandra", I replied, "Thank you for asking".
She smiled and said, "No problem, Cassandra. I'm Dyan. Just give me 15 minutes and I'll have this filled."
This exchange, brief as it was, really made my day. Most times, people see and treat me like any other woman. Given that my old name is still on the prescription forms, I am effectively outing myself every time I go to the pharmacy or any other place at which legal identity documentation is involved. I had always assumed that they see more than a few trans women like myself, who are picking up prescriptions for Spiro and Estradiol, and at this point it was no big deal. It still is, of course, but to be acknowledged at trans and treated with this degree of understanding is a wonderful feeling.
Purely by coincidence, I got a text from CVS, asking me to take a survey. Normally, I don't bother with those store- or restaurant-visit surveys but I went ahead and did this one. I answered everything honestly and in the freeform comment section, I filled up the alotted number of characters with a glowing review of my interaction with Dyan.
I'm actually looking forward to getting my next prescription refill and hoping Dyan is there again.
Jul 26 2017, 10.47pm
Yesterday, I had a conversation with one of my coworkers. The conversation took a turn, I don't remember how, toward the topic of gender confirmation surgery - specifically, the "bottom surgery" undergone by many trans women. I never stated or even implied that I was entertaining the thought of doing that myself.
One of the things she said that sticks out in my mind was that, "...it's unnatural". "The end result isn't natural".
She also used that same term in reference to the changes in brain chemistry and emotions I had been experiencing as part of hormone therapy.
"Unnatural", she said.
I didn't really have a lucid response for these statements at the time, but it gave me food for thought.
I can't help but wonder a few things:
Is spending over 40 years living with a brain wired for the wrong body, "natural"?
Is living all these years depressed and angry at a subconscious level, "natural"?
If the answer to either of these questions is "yes", then all I have to offer nature is an upraised middle finger.
Jul 31 2017, 09.34pm
It's been a while since the last one, but today was a particularly rough day. I'm running a serious sleep deficit already and it's only Monday. That's probably a huge part of the problem.
Today started out a little slow, but I kept getting pulled in many different directions and was unable to focus very long on any one given thing. A friend asked me to go and get coffee with her. I gratefully accepted, enjoying the brief respite from the seemingly endless series of interruptions.
I think what made today the hardest for me in a while were two things:
For a while now, I've been hung up on the quality of my voice, vis a vis sounding more feminine. It's been bothering me that I can't seem to make any progress in that regard, especially when talking to someone over the phone, which I do quite a bit as part of my job.
Second, and somewhat related, is that I've been getting misgendered repeatedly all day. More often than not, the people who do it don't even realize they did. I try to maintain an understanding that everyone around me has to adjust but when I'm tired like this, my defenses are way down and stuff like this gets under my skin more than it normally would. Combined with being self-conscious about my voice, and it made for a lousy day.
Late afternoon, because of all of this, I was emotionally not in a very good place. I sought solace in visiting with friends for a few minutes, but couldn't bring myself to just open up and share what was really bothering me. I didn't want to sound like I was pissing and moaning about the same thing over and over again and just complaining instead of actually doing anything to remedy the situation, so I kept quiet and did my best to maintain my composure.
It's disconcerting just how easily that mask slides back into place.
I knew early on into this transition that I would be tested again and again but didn't know when it would come. I think today is one of those days. What has me the most worried is just how often I will be tested in the days to come and what the end result will be.
I'm honestly terrified of the prospect that things might get bad enough that I just say, "{EXPLETIVE} it" and walk away - just resigning myself to being the same old miserable overweight sloth, committing a slow suicide through neglect.
I've come so far in such a short period of time that I don't want to give it all up. I'm not anywhere near that "{EXPLETIVE} it" moment but even the slimmest possibility that that time may come has me worried.